"Vukcevich-TheFinger" - читать интересную книгу автора (Vukcevich Ray)RAY VUKCEVICH THE FINGER Bobby wanted to practice it on his mother, but he knew her face would turn red, then purple, and he'd see all the veins pulsing in her head. Smoke would pour from her ears and nose. Her eyes would pinwheel, and sparks would fly. Her lips would disappear in a tight mean line. She'd start vibrating and humming, and the top of her head would blow off like the lid of a steam kettle, and everything inside would run down her face, melting her until there'd be nothing left but a puddle of Mom stuff. So Bobby told her he was going out, instead. He let the rusty spring on the screen door have its way as he ran from the kitchen into the Arizona sunshine and summer bug noise, and he was almost out of sight when he heard the satisfying bang! that made all the peacocks scream. Bobby lazed on down the street, Main Street, the only street, a dirt road really, kicking rocks and looking for devils' horns. Swarms of summertime flies buzzed around his head. He pulled at his jeans and the shorts riding up in the crack of his butt. He kept an eye out for whirlwinds to stand in as he practiced flipping birds, the middle finger of his right hand snicking out like the blade of a switchblade knife. skill his cousin fat Edward, who was thirteen and should know, had told him. Necessary for a gee man, Bobby thought Ibut never said} because that's what he was going to be -- a gee man and maybe get himself a good golly molly. Twist and shout! Yes. He flipped off the sky. And the sky said, "Hey!" Bobby tipped his head back to see a man in a cage. The cage hung from a high branch of the biggest oak tree around. Jail tree. Everyone called the prisoner Robert; everyone knew he liked to drink whiskey and pinch the bottoms of bar girls. Bobby flipped him off. Robert held the bars of the cage with both hands and glared down at Bobby. "Don't do that, Bobby B." "That's not my name," Bobby said and held up his fist and triggered his finger again. Just when his middle finger snapped into position, he jabbed at Robert with his whole hand -- a nice bit of style, Bobby thought. "I told you not to do that!" Robert yelled. He pumped his legs and the cage swung on its rope. Bobby showed him his bird again. Robert had gotten the cage going around in a circle, and now he crashed it against the trunk of the oak tree. "You just wait till I get out of here!" |
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